Ah, the joy of the opposite sides of the Atlantic. That's a word I've known all my life.
My parents were both Brits, but it was in wide usage here anyway. Up until the 1980s, NZ slang was entirely British. Sadly, US TV has made the greatest impact since then and half the kids in the country have a pseudo American accent to some degree.
Admin wrote: ↑Thu May 18, 2023 6:55 pm
Ah, the joy of the opposite sides of the Atlantic. That's a word I've known all my life.
My parents were both Brits, but it was in wide usage here anyway. Up until the 1980s, NZ slang was entirely British. Sadly, US TV has made the greatest impact since then and half the kids in the country have a pseudo American accent to some degree.
I call it "cultural imperialism" and I've made a bunch of Americans very upset by explaining it to them.
If you're not on edge, you're taking up too much space.
Somebody I went out with a long time ago would suddenly develop a British accent when she got drunk. When I heard that I knew it was time. Think she was the only woman I ever screwed in my cab.
Being British isn't seen as a good thing in NZ. Older Kiwis will remember the infamous "Punch a Pom a Day" campaign from the 1970s. My brother had the t-shirt.